4.8 Article

Interacting neural ensembles in orbitofrontal cortex for social and feeding behaviour

Journal

NATURE
Volume 565, Issue 7741, Pages 645-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-018-0866-8

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency Neuro-FAST program
  2. Simons Foundation
  3. Tarlton Foundation
  4. Wiegers Family Fund
  5. Nancy and James Grosfeld Foundation
  6. Samuel and Betsy Reeves Fund
  7. HHWF
  8. NIDA
  9. Simons LSRF fellowship
  10. NSF GRFP
  11. NIDDK
  12. H.L. Snyder Medical Foundation
  13. National Institute of Mental Health
  14. National Institute on Drug Abuse
  15. National Science Foundation

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Categorically distinct basic drives (for example, for social versus feeding behaviour(1-3)) can exert potent influences on each other; such interactions are likely to have important adaptive consequences (such as appropriate regulation of feeding in the context of social hierarchies) and can become maladaptive (such as in clinical settings involving anorexia). It is known that neural systems regulating natural and adaptive caloric intake, and those regulating social behaviours, involve related circuitry(4-7), but the causal circuit mechanisms of these drive adjudications are not clear. Here we investigate the causal role in behaviour of cellular-resolution experience-specific neuronal populations in the orbitofrontal cortex, a major reward-processing hub that contains diverse activity-specific neuronal populations that respond differentially to various aspects of caloric intake(8-13) and social stimuli(14,15). We coupled genetically encoded activity imaging with the development and application of methods for optogenetic control of multiple individually defined cells, to both optically monitor and manipulate the activity of many orbitofrontal cortex neurons at the single-cell level in real time during rewarding experiences (caloric consumption and social interaction). We identified distinct populations within the orbitofrontal cortex that selectively responded to either caloric rewards or social stimuli, and found that activity of individually specified naturally feeding-responsive neurons was causally linked to increased feeding behaviour; this effect was selective as, by contrast, single-cell resolution activation of naturally social-responsive neurons inhibited feeding, and activation of neurons responsive to neither feeding nor social stimuli did not alter feeding behaviour. These results reveal the presence of potent cellular-level subnetworks within the orbitofrontal cortex that can be precisely engaged to bidirectionally control feeding behaviours subject to, for example, social influences.

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